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A third of world's aquifers are being sucked dry - NASA data

ROME - Human water use is sucking dry around a third of the world's largest underground water basins at an alarming rate, with potentially risky consequences for farmers and other consumers, researchers said.

ROME - Human water use is sucking dry around a third of the world's largest underground water basins at an alarming rate, with potentially risky consequences for farmers and other consumers, researchers said.

Eight of the planet's 37 biggest aquifers are classified as "overstressed" because they have almost no new water flowing in to offset usage, according to two studies from the University of  California  based on NASA satellite data.

Another five aquifers are classified as "highly stressed," meaning some water is flowing back into them but they are still in trouble, said the studies published in the journal Water Resources Research this week.

Aquifers become stressed when too much water is taken out for household, agricultural and industrial use, and not enough surface water seeps in to replenish the underground rock formations.

The Arabian Aquifer System, a key water source for 60 million people in  Saudi ArabiaIraqQatarSyria  and other countries is the world's most overstressed, the research said.

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The Indus Basin aquifer in  northwestern India  and  Pakistan  is the second most vulnerable, and the Murzuk-Djado Basin in  north Africa  is the third.

All of these regions are already suffering from varying degrees of political strife, and water scarcity will invariably intensify social problems, the researchers said.

"We are trying to raise red flags now to pinpoint where active management today could protect future lives and livelihoods,"  Alexandra Richey , lead author of both studies, said in a statement.

The most overburdened aquifers are in some of the world's driest areas, which depend on groundwater as there isn't enough rainfall for crops and human needs.

In  California , where a drought has wrought havoc on farmers and homeowners, the Central Valley aquifer was labeled as highly stressed and suffering from rapid depletion. But the situation is worse in other places like the Middle East  or North Africa, the studies said.

Scientists do not know exactly how much groundwater remains in the aquifers.

"In a water-scarce society, we can no longer tolerate this level of uncertainty, especially since groundwater is disappearing so rapidly," Richey said.

The studies are the first to examine groundwater losses with data from outer space. They measured bumps in the Earth's gravity, which are affected by the weight of water in different regions. 

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